veg

I believe average beginning scores are just as varied as the actual scores themselves. I started at a 150, but I have a friend who started at 170, and know someone else who started in the 130's. Games are the easiest section to learn, though. I think most people agree on that?

I think the logic games are the most intimidating at first, but then they slowly turn into a twisted sort of fun. They can be the most satisfying part because you can usually tell if you've nailed them. On the other hand, they can make you want to cry on the spot if you just can't figure one out.

1) Where you start out will probably depend a lot on your past standardized test experience. If you got above 750 on SAT verbal, you will probably start out higher than someone who scored in the 600's.

2) Take a course only if you don't think you have the discipline to stick to a practicing schedule yourself. It's not like the courses have some realm of special knowledge that nobody else has.

3) I have found that Reading comp is more of a you-get-it-or-you-don't type thing, while logic games can be learned fairly easily. Logical reasoning can be learned too, but it takes much longer than logic games. I'm finally getting to where I can consistently miss 2 or less questions per LR section, but to get to that point I had to do about 1200 of them.